J. Cheryl Exum is Emeritus Professor of Biblical Studies at the University of Sheffield, UK.
In yet another thought-provoking and challenging volume, Cheryl Exum explores several gems from the repertoire of Western art to reflect on what is said - but more often left unsaid - in the biblical text. With meticulous attention to the detail of the paintings, she conveys with freshness, originality and wit how an artist can capture that very precise nuance of a text, or that exact trait of a character, that so often eludes traditional commentators. Through a judicious selection of artists and paintings, Exum skilfully and persuasively shows us that there are many ways of seeing and appropriating biblical stories. Most importantly, Exum has successfully championed an approach that is useful for everyone who values the artist's essential role in biblical interpretation. * Martin O'Kane, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, UK * Art as Biblical Commentary takes an increasingly popular branch of Biblical Studies to new levels, exegetically and methodologically, showing over and over again, for the benefit of ordinary readers as well as experts, what valuable, nuanced insights into the meaning of the Bible can be revealed by a careful study of works of art like a seventeenth-century Dutch Jael, Deborah and Barak, two nineteenth-century paintings of Eve and Delilah and a twentieth-century Blinded Samson. * John F. A. Sawyer, University of Edinburgh, UK * A conversation between ancient texts, early modern visual responses, and contemporary teachers and their students is the most effective way to keep the past alive on behalf of today and tomorrow. Rather than the hopeless endeavour of reconstructing the past as it was Exum helps us talk with the past as it is . And in the process, she demonstrates that one can talk with images as much as with words. This is interdisciplinary cultural analysis at its best. * Mieke Bal, Cultural Theorist and video artist, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands *